Safeway Stores, Inc. v. United States

93 F. Supp. 900, 118 Ct. Cl. 73, 1950 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 130
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 5, 1950
DocketNo. 46976
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 93 F. Supp. 900 (Safeway Stores, Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Safeway Stores, Inc. v. United States, 93 F. Supp. 900, 118 Ct. Cl. 73, 1950 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 130 (cc 1950).

Opinions

Whitaker, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff is a large retail chain store company. It sues for just compensation for meat which it says the defendant requisitioned from it during the last World War.

After the military authorities began taking meat for their own use, it almost disappeared from the counters of the retail stores. The retail merchant was unable to secure it ■ in anything like adequate quantities to supply the demand of his customers. In this exigency the plaintiff bought first one packing house and then another in an effort to supply its customers.

When it bought its first packing house the defendant was demanding a substantial part of the output of all packers and it continued to do, so throughout the war period, during which time about 45 percent of plaintiff’s output was re[84]*84quired. It was paid therefor the ceiling price established by the Office of Price Administration for wholesale sales, and defendant says this is all it is entitled to. Plaintiff says this price is inadequate to justly compensate it, and that, since it was a retailer and sold its meat at retail, it is entitled to what it could have gotten for it on the retail market.

Defendant says, first, it did not take plaintiff’s meat in the sense this word is used in the Fifth Amendment. We cannot agree. By set-aside orders, plaintiff was required to hold for the defendant’s use certain meat the defendant’s agent had selected. It was required to do this under penalties of as much as a $50,000 fine and imprisonment up to three years, and the revocation of .its license to do business.

When defendant had definitely decided on the beef it wanted, it issued purchase orders stating the amount desired and the price to be paid therefor, but plaintiff never consented to this price, but protested against it, and reserved the right to demand all it was entitled to under the law.

Plaintiff was under compulsion to deliver the meat demanded and it is entitled to compensation under the Fifth Amendment. See Stahel v. United States, 111 C. Cls. 682, 736-743; 336 U. S. 951.

The more difficult question is the amount of compensation to which plaintiff is entitled.

We cannot agree with plaintiff that it is entitled to the price at which it could have sold the meat at retail. The defendant was requisitioning meat from all packers. Substantially none of them, save plaintiff, had retail outlets for their meat. Almost all of them sold only at wholesale. The defendant was liable to them only for the fair and just price which they /could have obtained at wholesale. We do not think that plaintiff is entitled to preferential treatment.

It cannot be denied that plaintiff under ordinary circumstances would be entitled to whatever it could secure for its product by skillful marketing. Ordinarily it would be entitled to whatever the market would bring, and if it could raise this price by “dressing up” its product, or in any other way, it would seem it would be entitled to this price. The difficulty, however, is that, while plaintiff had provided for [85]*85itself tbis retail market, where prices were higher, the defendant bought not in this market but in the wholesale market. Of all plaintiff’s sales, 45 percent of them went to the defendant. In the retail market the plaintiff sold 55 percent of its product, a steak here, a roast there, to thousands of customers; whereas the remainder of its product, 45 percent, was sold to one customer. Manifestly, this one customer, taking nearly one-half of plaintiff’s entire output, should not have to pay the same price as the one-steak or the one-roast customer.

So large a customer should pay, it would seem, no more than the wholesale price. It would not seem “just” for the plaintiff to demand more.

For another reason plaintiff cannot complain if it receives only the wholesale price: When plaintiff entered the meat packing business it knew the defendant was taking a large part of the output of all meat packers and was paying them therefor only the wholesale price. It knew it would not be permitted to operate if it did not consent thereto, even though under compulsion. It entered into this business with this knowledge.

We think it can claim only whatever is just compensation for its meat on the wholesale market. So, in our opinion, the question comes down to what was just compensation on the wholesale market.

Plaintiff has been paid the wholesale ceiling prices declared by the Office of Price Administration. Plaintiff, however, says that these prices are inadequate to justly compensate it because its cost of producing the meat was more than these ceiling prices and, therefore, if paid only these prices, it will sustain a loss, of around a half million dollars. It points also to the commissioner’s finding that its business was efficiently run and that, therefore, inferentially at least, its costs must not have been excessive. It says that “just compensation” could not be less than what it cost it to furnish its products to the defendant, these costs having been shown to be reasonable.

This is a strong argument that finds much sympathy in the breast of this Court. However, we are confronted with [86]*86two opinions of the Supreme Court that make it impossible for us to decide this case accordingly.

The first is United States v. Felin & Company, 334 U. S. 624. Respondent in that case was a meat packer. The United States requisitioned its meat products- and Felin & Company found it necessary for good business reasons to replace them. Its cost of replacement was more than what the1 United States had paid it and it claimed the excess. We gave it the excess, but the Supreme Court reversed us. Three of the justices of that Court said Felin & Company -was entitled to no more than the ceiling price. Three denied recovery because they said this company had not been able to show its replacement cost. It was at least intimated that it would have been entitled to its replacement cost, if it had been able to prove it. One concurred in part in both the former opinions. Two justices dissented.

Later, the Supreme Court decided the case of United States v. Commodities Trading Corporation, 339 U. S. 121. In that case two of the justices did not participate, but of the remaining seven, five thought the ceiling prices were controlling in the absence of exceptional circumstances. That opinion must determine our decision here, whatever our own view may be. Plaintiff was paid the ceiling price applicable to those who sold meat wholesale.

However, there is one further thing to be said: All packers were paid a certain subsidy by the Government, because of the fact they had to buy live cattle on a market in which the defendant had found it impracticable to fix controls and had to sell the products therefrom in a controlled market. Not haying imposed controls on the packers’ “raw material,” it gave them a “compensating” subsidy.

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93 F. Supp. 900, 118 Ct. Cl. 73, 1950 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/safeway-stores-inc-v-united-states-cc-1950.